Schulze-Makuch says despite the lake being filled with hot asphalt and bubbling with noxious hydrocarbon gases and carbon dioxide, it's full of life.

"Water is scarce in the lake and certainly below the levels normally thought of as a threshold for life to exist," he says. "Yet on average, each gram of 'goo' in the lake contains tens of millions of living cells."

Strange life forms

Schulze-Makuch says his analysis of gene sequences shows many different kinds of microbial species of single-celled organisms such as archea and bacteria.

"Some are methanogens, others thrive on sulfur or iron, and many have never been seen before. They make a living in an oxygen-free environment full of nasty heavy metals, with very little water, eating hydrocarbons and in some cases breathing out metals," he syas.

"They're very different from microbes found in places like the LaBrea tar pits in Los Angeles. Similar strange life forms have previously been seen in hydrocarbon samples from sub sea oil wells. Which is another reason they are of interest.

"A better understanding could lead to a number of advances in techniques for things like microbial remediation."

Extraterrestrial life

But the most exciting implication of this discovery according to Schulze-Makuch is for the possibility of life on the distant Saturnian moon of Titan.

"There's a growing sense that Titan may have all the ingredients for life," he says. "It has thermodynamic equilibrium, abundant carbon-containing molecules and a fluid environment but of methane rather than water."

Schulze-Makuch points to recent evidence that some micro-organisms can make their own water by chewing on various hydrocarbons.

But he stresses one should not confuse issues of life being able to make a living in strange environments with the actual creation of life.

"That's different from the question of what are the environmental conditions needed for the origin of life. Until we have that really nailed down, it's very difficult to make a call about the possibility of life on another planet or moon that's far away."